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The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

author:Delicate and old game piggy
The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

The famous sea drift survival masterpiece "RAFT", which has been affirmed by thousands of players on Steam, was officially released in June, and the game naturally added a lot of new content, which also allowed josh, a well-known overseas YouTuber "Let's Game It Out" player, back to the game, following the last Skynet raft, he once again used amazing creativity to give the game (ㄨㄢˊ) (ㄏㄨㄞˋ).

Josh's channel content has always been based on the idea of playing cards without playing cards to carry out a variety of interesting game experiments, after his previous experience in the Early Access version, this time he challenged RAFT for the second time, and still covered the strange shape of the raft.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

However, in the official version, players can accumulate prestige in exchange for new "Detail Plank" plank designs in a store on a large island, and the biggest use of this thing is to be able to build freely, regardless of angle or load-bearing restrictions (as long as the planks are connected to the raft body).

It is conceivable that the original intention of the developers is to let players have more room to play in the creation of rafts through this kind of custom wooden board.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

However, Josh easily exceeded the developer's expectations.

It took him 9 hours to cover a tornado.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

This super-huge tornado raft is basically connected layer by layer using refined wooden planks, and its size is comparable to the height of the oil drilling platform in the game, and it looks like a real natural disaster from a distance.

However, the real creative part of Josh was not the raft shape he designed, but the fact that he further discovered the bug use of refined wooden planks after building this natural wonder.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

First of all, because refined planks are not limited by load and angle, you can easily build bridges in the air, and build bridges to any height through wooden planks.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

Since the plank can be covered upwards, of course, it can also be covered down and into the sea, which will trigger a new bug, and the player standing on the board will still be in the "land" state without the need for oxygen cylinders, and will not be attacked by sharks.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

More importantly, because the plank is connected to the main body of the raft, it will also drift under the influence of the floating of the ocean, and the player can squeeze through the wall through the drift of the ocean into the space that cannot be entered.

The ghost who created the tornado raft in "Raft" actually played the game with a wooden board

Combining the above points, friends who have played RAFT should be able to guess how Josh played the game badly. Yes, everywhere he went were custom-built boardwalks floating in the air, forming an adventurous "trail" around his tornado raft.

In this way, he uses wooden planks and through walls to open up new content, and the locked door of the mission cannot stop him, so he arrives at "Utopia" to complete the game... However, because of the relationship between the walls, it is not recommended that players follow suit.